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Ch05-Advanced Data Modeling
Chapter 5
Advanced Data Modeling
Discussion Focus
Your discussion can be divided into three parts to reflect the chapter coverage:


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The first part of the discussion covers the Extended Entity Relationship Model.
a. Start by exploring the use of entity supertypes and subtypes.
b. Use the specialization hierarchy example in Figure 5.2 to illustrate the main constructs.
c. Illustrate the benefits of attribute inheritance and relationship inheritance.
d. Remember that an entity supertype and an entity subtype are related in a 1:1 relationship.
e. Emphasize the use of the subtype discriminator and then explain the concept of
overlapping and disjoint constraints in relation to entity subtypes.
f. The completeness constraint indicates whether all entity supertypes must have at least
one subtype.
g. Explore the specialization and generalization hierarchies.
h. Finally, explain the use of entity clusters as an alternative method to simplify crowded
data models.
The second part of the discussion covers the importance of proper primary key selection.
a. Start by clearly stating the function of a PK -- identification -- and how that function
differs from the descriptive nature of the other attributes in an entity. Explain the use of
PKs to uniquely identify each entity instance.
b. Discuss natural keys, primary keys, and surrogate keys.
c. Examine the primary key guidelines that specify the PK characteristics. PKs must be
unique, non-intelligent, they do not change over time, they are ideally composed of a
single attribute, they are numeric, and they are security compliant.
d. Finally, contrast the use of surrogate and composite primary keys. Remind students that
composite primary keys are useful in composite entities where each primary key
combination is allowed only once in the M:N relationship.
The third part of the discussion covers four special design cases:
a. Implementing 1:1 relationships.
b. Maintaining the history of time-variant data.
c. Fan traps.
d. Redundant relationships.
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Answers to Review Questions
1. What is an entity supertype, and why is it used?
An entity supertype is a generic entity type that is related to one or more entity subtypes, where the
entity supertype contains the common characteristics and the entity subtypes contain the unique
characteristics of each entity subtype. The reason for using supertypes is to minimize the number of
nulls and to minimize the likelihood of redundant relationships.
2. What kinds of data would you store in an entity subtype?
An entity subtype is a more specific entity type that is related to an entity supertype, where the entity
supertype contains the common characteristics and the entity subtypes contain the unique
characteristics of each entity subtype. The entity subtype will store the data that is specific to the
entity; that is, attributes that are unique the subtype.
3. What is a specialization hierarchy?
A specialization hierarchy depicts the arrangement of higher-level entity supertypes (parent
entities) and lower-level entity subtypes (child entities). To answer the question precisely, we have
used the text’s Figure 5.2. (We have reproduced the figure on the next page for your convenience.)
Figure 5.2 shows the specialization hierarchy formed by an EMPLOYEE supertype and three entity
subtypes—PILOT, MECHANIC, and ACCOUNTANT.
(Text) FIGURE 5.2 A Specialization Hierarchy
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The specialization hierarchy shown in Figure 5.2 reflects the 1:1 relationship between EMPLOYEE
and its subtypes. For example, a PILOT subtype occurrence is related to one instance of the
EMPLOYEE supertype and a MECHANIC subtype occurrence is related to one instance of the
EMPLOYEE supertype.
4. What is a subtype discriminator? Given an example of its use.
A subtype discriminator is the attribute in the supertype entity that is used to determine to which
entity subtype the supertype occurrence is related. For any given supertype occurrence, the value of
the subtype discriminator will determine which subtype the supertype occurrence is related to. For
example, an EMPLOYEE supertype may include the EMP_TYPE value “P” to indicate the
PROFESSOR subtype.
5. What is an overlapping subtype? Give an example.
Overlapping subtypes are subtypes that contain non-unique subsets of the supertype entity set; that
is, each entity instance of the supertype may appear in more than one subtype. For example, in a
university environment, a person may be an employee or a student or both. In turn, an employee may
be a professor as well as an administrator. Because an employee also may be a student, STUDENT
and EMPLOYEE are overlapping subtypes of the supertype PERSON, just as PROFESSOR and
ADMINISTRATOR are overlapping subtypes of the supertype EMPLOYEE. The text’s Figure 5.4
(reproduced next for your convenience) illustrates overlapping subtypes with the use of the letter O
inside the category shape.
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(Text) FIGURE 5.4 Specialization Hierarchy with Overlapping Subtypes
6. What is the difference between partial completeness and total completeness?
Partial completeness means that not every supertype occurrence is a member of a subtype; that is,
there may be some supertype occurrences that are not members of any subtype. Total completeness
means that every supertype occurrence must be a member of at least one subtype.
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For questions 7 – 9, refer to Figure Q5.7
FIGURE Q5.7 The PRODUCT data model
7. List all of the attributes of a movie.
Recall that the subtype inherits all of the attributes and relationships of the supertype. Therefore, all
of the attributes of a subtype include the common attributes from the supertype plus the unique
(unique to that subtype) attributes from the subtype. All of the attributes of a movie would be:
 Prod_Num
 Prod_Title
 Prod_ReleaseDate
 Prod_Price
 Prod_Type
 Movie_Rating
 Movie_Director
8. According to the data model, is it required that every entity instance in the PRODUCT table
be associated with an entity instance in the CD table? Why or why not?
No. The completeness constraint for the data model shows a total completeness constraint from
PRODUCT to the subtypes. However, the total completeness constraint indicates that every instance
in the supertype (PRODUCT) must be associated with one row in some subtype, not all subtypes.
Since the subtypes are designated as disjoint, or exclusive, then every row in the supertype is
associated a row in only one subtype. For some products that subtype will be CD, but for other
products the subtype will be either Movie or Book.
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9. Is it possible for a book to appear in the BOOK table without appearing in the PRODUCT
table? Why or why not?
No. Subtypes can only exist within the context of a supertype.
10. What is an entity cluster, and what advantages are derived from its use?
An entity cluster is a “virtual” entity type used to represent multiple entities and relationships in the
ERD. An entity cluster is formed by combining multiple interrelated entities into a single abstract
entity object. An entity cluster is considered “virtual” or “abstract” in the sense that it is not actually
an entity in the final ERD, but rather a temporary entity used to represent multiple entities and
relationships with the purpose of simplifying the ERD and thus enhancing its readability.
11. What primary key characteristics are considered desirable? Explain why each characteristic is
considered desirable.
Desirable PK characteristics are summarized in the text’s Table 5.3, reproduced below for your
convenience. The table also includes the reason why each characteristic is desirable. (See the
Rationale column.)
PK Characteristic
Unique values
Rationale
The PK must uniquely identify each entity instance. A
primary key must be able to guarantee unique values.
It cannot contain nulls.
Nonintelligent
The PK should not have embedded semantic meaning.
An attribute with embedded semantic meaning is
probably better used as a descriptive characteristic of
the entity rather than as an identiier. In other words,
a student ID of “650973” would be preferred over
“Smith, Martha L.” as a primary key identiier.
No change over time
If an attribute has semantic meaning, it may be
subject to updates. This is why names do not make
good primary keys. If you have “Vickie Smith” as the
primary key, what happens when she gets married? If
a primary key is subject to change, the foreign key
values must be updated, thus adding to the database
work load. Furthermore, changing a primary key value
means that you are basically changing the identity of
an entity.
Preferably
single- A primary key should have the minimum number of
attribute
attributes possible. Single-attribute primary keys are
desirable but not required. Single-attribute primary
keys simplify the implementation of foreign keys.
Having multiple-attribute primary keys can cause
primary keys of related entities to grow through the
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Preferably numeric
Security complaint
possible addition of many attributes, thus adding to
the database work load and making (application)
coding more cumbersome.
Unique values can be better managed when they are
numeric because the database can use internal
routines to implement a “counter-style” attribute that
automatically increments values with the addition of
each new row. In fact, most database systems include
the ability to use special constructs, such as
Autonumber in MS Access, to support selfincrementing primary key attributes.
The selected primary key must not be composed of
any attribute(s) that might be considered a security
risk or violation. For example, using a Social Security
number as a PK in an EMPLOYEE table is not a good
idea.
TABLE 5.3 Desirable Primary Key Characteristics
12. Under what circumstances are composite primary keys appropriate?
Composite primary keys are particularly useful in two cases:
 As identifiers of composite entities, where each primary key combination is allowed only once
in the M:N relationship.
 As identifiers of weak entities, where the weak entity has a strong identifying relationship with
the parent entity.
To illustrate the first case, assume that you have a STUDENT entity set and a CLASS entity set. In
addition, assume that those two sets are related in a M:N relationship via an ENROLL entity set in
which each student/class combination may appear only once in the composite entity. The text’s
Figure 5.6 (reproduced here for your convenience) shows the ERD to represent such a relationship.
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(Text) FIGURE 5.6 M:N Relationship Between Student and Class
As shown in the text’s Figure 5.6, the composite primary key automatically provides the benefit of
ensuring that there cannot be duplicate values—that is, it ensures that the same student cannot enroll
more than once in the same class.
In the second case, a weak entity in a strong identifying relationship with a parent entity is normally
used to represent one of two cases:
1. A real-world object that is existent dependent on another real-world object. Those types of
objects are distinguishable in the real world. A dependent and an employee are two separate
people who exist independent of each other. However, such objects can exist in the model only
when they relate to each other in a strong identifying relationship. For example, the relationship
between EMPLOYEE and DEPENDENT is one of existence dependency in which the primary
key of the dependent entity is a composite key that contains the key of the parent entity.
2. A real-world object that is represented in the data model as two separate entities in a strong
identifying relationship. For example, the real-world invoice object is represented by two
entities in a data model: INVOICE and LINE. Clearly, the LINE entity does not exist in the real
world as an independent object, but rather as part of an INVOICE.
In both cases, having a strong identifying relationship ensures that the dependent entity can exist
only when it is related to the parent entity. In summary, the selection of a composite primary key for
composite and weak entity types provides benefits that enhance the integrity and consistency of the
model.
13. What is a surrogate primary key, and when would you use one?
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A surrogate primary key is an “artificial” PK that is used to uniquely identify each entity occurrence
when there is no good natural key available or when the “natural” PK would include multiple
attributes. A surrogate PK is also used if the natural PK would be a long text variable. The reason for
using a surrogate PK is to ensure entity integrity, to simplify application development – by making
queries simpler – to ensure query efficiency – for example, a query based on a simple numeric
attribute is much faster than one based on a 200-bit character string -- and to ensure that
relationships between entities can be created more easily than would be the case with a composite
PK that may have to be used as a FK in a related entity.
14. When implementing a 1:1 relationship, where should you place the foreign key if one side is
mandatory and one side is optional? Should the foreign key be mandatory or optional?
Section 5.4.1 provides a detailed discussion. The text’s Table 5.5, reproduced here for your
convenience, shows the rationale for selecting the foreign key in a 1:1 relationship based on the
relationship properties in the ERD.
Case
I
II
III
ER Relationship
Action
Constraints
One side is mandatory Place the PK of the entity on the
and the other side is mandatory side in the entity on the
optional.
optional side as a FK and make the FK
mandatory.
Both sides are optional.
Select the FK that causes the fewest
number of nulls or place the FK in the
entity in which the (relationship) role is
played.
Both sides are mandatory. See Case II or consider revising your model
to ensure that the two entities do not
belong together in a single entity.
TABLE 5.5 Selection of Foreign Key in a 1:1 Relationship
15. What are time-variant data, and how would you deal with such data from a database design
point of view?
As the label implies, time variant data are time-sensitive. For example, if a university wants to keep
track of the history of all administrative appointments by date of appointment and date of
termination, you see time-variant data at work.
16. What is the most common design trap, and how does it occur?
A design trap occurs when a relationship is improperly or incompletely identified and therefore, it is
represented in a way that is not consistent with the real world. The most common design trap is
known as a fan trap. A fan trap occurs when you have one entity in two 1:M relationships to other
entities, thus producing an association among the other entities that is not expressed in the model.
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Problem Solutions
1. Given the following business scenario, create a Crow’s Foot ERD using a specialization
hierarchy if appropriate.
Two-Bit Drilling Company keeps information on employees and their insurance dependents.
Each employee has an employee number, name, date of hire, and title. If an employee is an
inspector, then the date of certification and the renewal date for that certification should also
be recorded in the system. For all employees, the Social Security number and dependent
names should be kept. All dependents must be associated with one and only one employee.
Some employees will not have dependents, while others will have many dependents.
The data model for this solution is shown in FigP5.1 below.
FIGURE P5.1 Two-Bit Drilling Company ERD
In this scenario, a specialization hierarchy is appropriate because there is an identifiable type or kind
of employee (Inspectors), and additional attributes are recorded that are specific to just that kind or
type. It is worth noting that if there is only a single subtype, the disjoint/overlapping designation
may be omitted – if there is only one subtype then there is no other subtype to overlap or be disjoint
from. Also, when there is only a single subtype, the completeness constraint is always partial
completeness. If the completeness constraint were identified as total completeness, that would mean
that every employee must be an inspector, in which inspector would be a synonym for employee not
a kind of employee.
2. Given the following business scenario, create a Crow’s Foot ERD using a specialization
hierarchy if appropriate.
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Tiny Hospital keeps information on patients and hospital rooms. The system assigns each
patient a patient ID number. In addition, the patient’s name and date of birth are recorded.
Some patients are resident patients (they spend at least one night in the hospital) and others
are outpatients (they are treated and released). Resident patients are assigned to a room.
Each room is identified by a room number. The system also stores the room type (private or
semiprivate), and room fee. Over time, each room will have many patients that stay in it.
Each resident patient will stay in only one room. Every room must have had a patient, and
every resident patient must have a room.
The data model for this scenario is given in Figure P5.2 below.
FIGURE P5.2 Tiny Hospital ERD
Note that in this scenario, a specialization hierarchy is not appropriate. While resident patients are
an identifiable kind or type of patient instance, there are not additional attributes that are unique to
only that kind or type of patient. Participation in a relationship that is unique to a particular kind or
type of instance is not sufficient justification for a specialization hierarchy. Indicating that only
some instances will participate in a relationship is addressed by the optional participation
designation. In this scenario, all resident patients must have a room; however, not all patients are
resident patients so ROOM is optional to patient. If students ask about the need for an attribute to
distinguish between outpatients and resident patients, remind them that in this limited scenario the
only distinction between outpatients and resident patients is whether or not they are associated with a
room. Therefore, they can consider the Room_Num foreign key in the PATIENT table can serve in
that capacity.
3. Given the following business scenario, create a Crow’s Foot ERD using a specialization
hierarchy if appropriate.
Granite Sales Company keeps information on employees and the departments that they work
in. For each department, the department name, internal mail box number, and office phone
extension are kept. A department can have many assigned employees, and each employee is
assigned to only one department. Employees can be salaried employees, hourly employees, or
contract employees. All employees are assigned an employee number. This is kept along with
the employee’s name and address. For hourly employees, hourly wage and target weekly work
hours are stored (e.g. the company may target 40 hours/week for some, 32 hours/week for
others, and 20 hours/week for others). Some salaried employees are salespeople that can earn
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a commission in addition to their base salary. For all salaried employees, the yearly salary
amount is recorded in the system. For salespeople, their commission percentage on sales and
commission percentage on profit are stored in the system. For example, John is a salesperson
with a base salary of $50,000 per year plus 2-percent commission on the sales price for all sales
he makes plus another 5 percent of the profit on each of those sales. For contract employees,
the beginning date and end dates of their contract are stored along with the billing rate for
their hours.
The data model for this scenario is given in Figure P5.3 below.
FIGURE P5.3 Granite Sales ERD.
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4. In Chapter 4, you saw the creation of the Tiny College database design. That design reflected
such business rules as “a professor may advise many students” and “a professor may chair one
department.” Modify the design shown in Figure 4.36 to include these business rules:
 An employee could be staff or a professor or an administrator.
 A professor may also be an administrator.
 Staff employees have a work level classification, such a Level I and Level II.
 Only professors can chair a department. A department is chaired by only one professor.
 Only professors can serve as the dean of a college. Each of the university’s colleges is
served by one dean.
 A professor can teach many classes.
 Administrators have a position title.
Given that information, create the complete ERD containing all primary keys, foreign keys,
and main attributes.
The solution is shown in Figure P5.4 below.
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FIGURE P5.4 Updated Tiny College ERD
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Note that the business rules require that the subtypes be overlapping for some subtypes but disjoint
for others. Specifically, the STAFF subtype is disjoint from ADMIN and PROFESSOR, but
ADMIN and PROFESSOR are overlapping. Such complex requirements may be implemented in the
database through the use of database constraints as described in Chapter 7, Introduction to Structured
Query Language (SQL).
5. Tiny College wants to keep track of the history of all administrative appointments (date of
appointment and date of termination). (Hint: Time variant data are at work.) The Tiny
College chancellor may want to know how many deans worked in the College of Business
between January 1, 1960 and January 1, 2010 or who the dean of the College of Education was
in 1990. Given that information, create the complete ERD containing all primary keys, foreign
keys, and main attributes.
The solution is shown in the following figure:
FIGURE P5.5 Tiny College Job History ERD Segment
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6. Some Tiny College staff employees are information technology (IT) personnel. Some IT
personnel provide technology support for academic programs. Some IT personnel provide
technology infrastructure support. Some IT personnel provide technology support for
academic programs and technology infrastructure support. IT personnel are not professors. IT
personnel are required to take periodic training to retain their technical expertise. Tiny
College tracks all IT personnel training by date, type, and results (completed vs. not
completed). Given that information, create the complete ERD containing all primary keys,
foreign keys, and main attributes.
This problem provides an opportunity to reinforce the idea that to qualify as a subtype, the
identifiable kind or type of instance must include additional attributes – being an identifiable kind or
type of entity instance is necessary but not sufficient to justify the create of subtypes. Given the
minimal attributes specified in the problem, the solution would be as shown in Figure 5.6a.
FIGURE 5.6a Minimal Tiny College IT Staffing Solution
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If, as is often the case in the problems included in textbook, we assume that the attributes specified
are just a subset of the complete attribute requirements for each entity, we can consider what the data
model would be given that additional attributes that are unique to the described kinds of entity
instances will exist. In that case, the expanded solution including subtypes for the described kinds of
staff members is shown in Figure 5.6b.
FIGURE 5.6b Expanded Tiny College IT Staffing Solution
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Note that in the specification of ITSTAFF as a subtype of STAFF, there is no disjoint/overlapping
designation for the subtype. When there is only one subtype, there is nothing to be disjointed from
or to overlap with; therefore, the designation may be safely omitted.
7. The FlyRight Aircraft Maintenance (FRAM) division of the FlyRight Company (FRC)
performs all maintenance for FRC’s aircraft. Produce a data model segment that reflects the
following business rules:
 All mechanics are FRC employees. Not all employees are mechanics.
 Some mechanics are specialized in engine (EN) maintenance. Some mechanics are
specialized in airframe (AF) maintenance. Some mechanics are specialized in avionics (AV)
maintenance. (Avionics are the electronic components of an aircraft that are used in
communication and navigation.) All mechanics take periodic refresher courses to stay
current in their areas of expertise. FRC tracks all course taken by each mechanic—date,
course type, certification (Y/N), and performance.
 FRC keeps a history of the employment of all mechanics. The history includes the date
hired, date promoted, date terminated, and so on. (Note: The “and so on” component is, of
course, not a real-world requirement. Instead, it has been used here to limit the number of
attributes you will show in your design.)
Given those requirements, create the Crow’s Foot ERD segment.
The solution is shown in the following figure:
Note that this is a very simplified version of the aircraft problem domain. The purpose is to help
students with the modeling notation for specialization hierarchies and to illustrate how this notation
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is different from the original entity relationship models. To truly justify the existence of the
mechanic subtypes, each subtype MUST have attributes that are unique to that particular subtype. A
good class exercise is to have students suggest attributes that may be unique to each subtype.
8. “Martial Arts R Us” (MARU) needs a database. MARU is a martial arts school with hundreds
of students. It is necessary to keep track of all the different classes that are being offered, who
is assigned to teach each class, and which students attend each class. Also, it is important to
track the progress of each student as they advance. Create a complete Crow’s Foot ERD for
these requirements:
 Students are given a student number when they join the school. This is stored along with
their name, date of birth, and the date they joined the school.
 All instructors are also students, but clearly, not all students are instructors. In addition to
the normal student information, for each instructor, the date that they start working as an
instructor must be recorded, along with their instructor status (compensated or volunteer).
 An instructor may be assigned to teach any number of classes, but each class has one and
only one assigned instructor. Some instructors, especially volunteer instructors, may not
be assigned to any class.
 A class is offered for a specific level at a specific time, day of the week, and location. For
example, one class taught on Mondays at 5:00 pm in Room #1 is an intermediate-level class.
Another class taught on Mondays at 6:00 pm in Room #1 is a beginner-level class. A third
class taught on Tuesdays at 5:00 pm in Room #2 is an advanced-level class.
 Students may attend any class of the appropriate level during each week so there is no
expectation that any particular student will attend any particular class session. Therefore,
the actual attendance of students at each individual class meeting must be tracked.
 A student will attend many different class meetings; and each class meeting is normally
attended by many students. Some class meetings may have no students show up for that
meeting. New students may not have attended any class meetings yet.
 At any given meeting of a class, instructors other than the assigned instructor may show up
to help. Therefore, a given class meeting may have several instructors (a head instructor
and many assistant instructors), but it will always have at least the one instructor that is
assigned to that class. For each class meeting, the date that the class was taught and the
instructors’ roles (head instructor or assistant instructor) need to be recorded. For
example, Mr. Jones is assigned to teach the Monday, 5:00 pm, intermediate class in Room
#1. During one particular meeting of that class, Mr. Jones was present as the head
instructor and Ms. Chen came to help as an assistant instructor.
 Each student holds a rank in the martial arts. The rank name, belt color, and rank
requirements are stored. Each rank will have numerous rank requirements. Each
requirement is considered a requirement just for the rank at which the requirement is
introduced. Every requirement is associated with a particular rank. All ranks except
white belt have at least one requirement.
 A given rank may be held by many students. While it is customary to think of a student as
having a single rank, it is necessary to track each student’s progress through the ranks.
Therefore, every rank that a student attains is kept in the system. New students joining the
school are automatically given a white belt rank. The date that a student is awarded each
rank should be kept in the system. All ranks have at least one student that has achieved
that rank at some time.
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The solution for this case is shown in Figure P5.8 below.
FIGURE P5.8 MARU ERD Solution
Notice that the figure includes surrogate keys for RANK, REQUIREMENT, and MEETING because
the natural keys did not meet the requirements for a good primary key.
The most common areas for confusion among students on this particular case surround attendance in
the class meetings. Students tend to think of relationship between CLASS and STUDENT similar
to the M:N enroll relationship that they have seen throughout the textbook. In this case, however,
the relationship is not an enrollment relationship – instead it is an attendance relationship. As
described in the case, students do not enroll in any particular class. What must be tracked is the
attendance for each individual class meeting. Therefore, the M:N relationship in this scenario is
actually between the STUDENT and the individual class MEETING.
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The case also provides an opportunity to reinforce the fact that subtypes inherit not only the
attributes of the supertype but also the relationships. One requirement of the case is that the system
must be able to track which instructors actually taught each class meeting. There is already a M:N
relationship between STUDENT and MEETING that can be implemented with the ATTENDANCE
bridge entity using only the Stu_Num and Meet_Num attributes. Students should consider that
because INSTRUCTOR is a subtype of STUDENT, instructors are already associated in a M:N
relationship with MEETING through that same bridge. By adding the Attend_Role attribute to
ATTENDANCE, the bridge entity can properly track all students in a given class meeting and record
what role they played in that meeting (e.g. student, assistant instructor, or head instructor).
Finally, it is worth pointing out to the students that requirements are described as being an attribute
of a rank. Some students will immediate consider requirements to be an entity, while others will
model requirement as an attribute of the RANK entity. Considering rank requirements to be an
attribute of RANK is perfectly acceptable – however, it must be noted that as such rank requirements
would be a multi-valued attribute. Therefore, the preferred implementation of a multi-valued
attribute (creating a new entity for the multi-valued attribute) would result in the creation of the
REQUIREMENT table anyway. So either way the student approaches the problem, it will
eventually lead to the solution shown above.
9. The Journal of E-commerce Research Knowledge is a prestigious information systems research
journal. It uses a peer-review process to select manuscripts for publication. Only about 10
percent of the manuscripts submitted to the journal are accepted for publication. A new issue
of the journal is published each quarter. Create a complete ERD to support the business needs
described below.
 Unsolicited manuscripts are submitted by authors. When a manuscript is received, the
editor will assign the manuscript a number, and record some basic information about it in
the system. The title of the manuscript, the date it was received, and a manuscript status of
“received” are entered. Information about the author(s) is also recorded. For each author,
the author’s name, mailing address, e-mail address, and affiliation (school or company for
which the author works) is recorded. Every manuscript must have an author. Only
authors that have submitted manuscripts are kept in the system. It is typical for a
manuscript to have several authors. A single author may have submitted many different
manuscripts to the journal. Additionally, when a manuscript has multiple authors, it is
important to record the order in which the authors are listed in the manuscript credits.
 At her earliest convenience, the editor will briefly review the topic of the manuscript to
ensure that the manuscript’s contents fall within the scope of the journal. If the content is
not within the scope of the journal, the manuscript’s status is changed to “rejected” and
the author is notified via e-mail. If the content is within the scope of the journal, then the
editor selects three or more reviewers to review the manuscript. Reviewers work for other
companies or universities and read manuscripts to ensure the scientific validity of the
manuscripts. For each reviewer, the system records a reviewer number, reviewer name,
reviewer e-mail address, affiliation, and areas of interest. Areas of interest are pre-defined
areas of expertise that the reviewer has specified. An area of interest is identified by a IS
code and includes a description (e.g. IS2003 is the code for “database modeling”). A
reviewer can have many areas of interest, and an area of interest can be associated with
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

many reviewers. All reviewers must specify at least one area of interest. It is unusual, but
it is possible to have an area of interest for which the journal has no reviewers. The editor
will change the status of the manuscript to “under review” and record which reviewers the
manuscript was sent to and the date on which it was sent to each reviewer. A reviewer will
typically receive several manuscripts to review each year, although new reviewers may not
have received any manuscripts yet.
The reviewers will read the manuscript at their earliest convenience and provide feedback
to the editor regarding the manuscript. The feedback from each reviewer includes rating
the manuscript on a 10-point scale for appropriateness, clarity, methodology, and
contribution to the field, as well as a recommendation for publication (accept or reject).
The editor will record all of this information in the system for each review received from
each reviewer and the date that the feedback was received. Once all of the reviewers have
provided their evaluation of the manuscript, the editor will decide whether or not to
publish the manuscript. If the editor decides to publish the manuscript, the manuscript’s
status is changed to “accepted” and the date of acceptance for the manuscript is recorded.
If the manuscript is not to be published, the status is changed to “rejected.”
Once a manuscript has been accepted for publication, it must be scheduled. For each issue
of the journal, the publication period (Fall, Winter, Spring, or Summer), publication year,
volume, and number are recorded. An issue will contain many manuscripts, although the
issue may be created in the system before it is known which manuscripts will go in that
issue. An accepted manuscript appears in only one issue of the journal. Each manuscript
goes through a typesetting process that formats the content (font, font size, line spacing,
justification, etc.). Once the manuscript has been typeset, the number of pages that the
manuscript will occupy is recorded in the system. The editor will then make decisions
about which issue each accepted manuscript will appear in and the order of manuscripts
within each issue. The order and the beginning page number for each manuscript must be
stored in the system. Once the manuscript has been scheduled for an issue, the status of the
manuscript is changed to “scheduled.” Once an issue is published, the print date for the
issue is recorded, and the statuses of all of the manuscripts in that issue are changed to
“published.”
The solution for this case is shown in Figure P5.9 below.
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FIGURE P5.9 Journal of E-commerce Research Knowledge ERD Solution
Again, this is another opportunity to stress to students that the creation of subtypes requires that
there exist identifiable kinds or types of entity instances and that kind or type must have additional
attributes that are unique to that kind or type. In this case, AUTHOR is a subtype because it is an
identifiable kind or type of PERSON and it includes additional attributes that are unique to authors
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Ch05-Advanced Data Modeling
(i.e. the address attributes). There is no subtype for reviewers because there are no attributes that are
unique to just that kind or type of PERSON. Reviewers do have relationships that are unique to
them, but that is not a sufficient reason to create a subtype.
It is not uncommon for students to want to make a separate subtype for each value that the
manuscript status attribute can have. Students will often, rightly, point out that there are new
attributes that come into play with different manuscript statuses. What the students are missing is
that there is no described mechanism by which a manuscript that has been accepted can fail to be
published. Therefore, once a manuscript is accepted, it does have all of the attributes in the
ACCEPTED subtype – the user just doesn't have a value for all of them yet.
10. Global Unified Technology Sales (GUTS) is moving toward a “bring your own device”
(BYOD) model for employee computing. Employees can use traditional desktop computers in
their offices. They can also use a variety of personal mobile computing devices such as tablets,
smartphones, and laptops. The new computing model introduces some security risks that
GUTS is attempting to address. The company wants to ensure that any devices connecting to
their servers are properly registered and approved by the Information Technology
department. Create a complete ERD to support the business needs described below:
 Every employee works for a department that has a department code, name, mail box
number, and phone number. The smallest department currently has 5 employees, and the
largest department has 40 employees. This system will only track in which department an
employee is currently employed. Very rarely, a new department can be created within the
company. At such times, the department may exist temporarily without any employees.
For every employee, their employee number and name (first, last, and middle initial) are
recorded in the system. It is also necessary to keep each employee’s title.
 An employee can have many devices registered in the system. Each device is assigned an
identification number when it is registered. Most employees have at least one device, but
newly hired employees might not have any devices registered initially. For each device, the
brand and model need to be recorded. Only devices that are registered to an employee will
be in the system. While unlikely, it is possible that a device could transfer from one
employee to another. However, if that happens, only the employee who currently owns the
device is tracked in the system. When a device is registered in the system, the date of that
registration needs to be recorded.
 Devices can be either desktop systems that reside in a company office or mobile devices.
Desktop devices are typically provided by the company and are intended to be a permanent
part of the company network. As such, each desktop device is assigned a static IP address,
and the MAC address for the computer hardware is kept in the system. A desktop device is
kept in a static location (building name and office number). This location should also be
kept in the system so that if the device becomes compromised, the IT department can
dispatch someone to remediate the problem.
 For mobile devices, it is important to also capture the device’s serial number, which
operating system (OS) it is using, and the version of the OS. The IT department is also
verifying that each mobile device has a screen lock enabled and has encryption enabled for
data. The system should support storing information on whether or not each mobile device
has these capabilities enabled.
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




Once a device is registered in the system, and the appropriate capabilities are enabled if it
is a mobile device, the device may be approved for connections to one or more servers. Not
all devices meet the requirements to be approved at first so the device might be in the
system for a period of time before it is approved to connect to any server. GUTS has a
number of servers, and a device must be approved for each server individually. Therefore,
it is possible for a single device to be approved for several servers but not for all servers.
Each server has a name, brand, and IP address. Within the IT department’s facilities are a
number of climate-controlled server rooms where the physical servers can be located.
Which room each server is in should also be recorded. Further, it is necessary to track
which operating system is being used on each server. Some servers are virtual servers and
some are physical servers. If a server is a virtual server, then the system should track
which physical server it is running on. A single physical server can host many virtual
servers, but each virtual server is hosted on only one physical server. Only physical servers
can host a virtual server. In other words, one virtual server cannot host another virtual
server. Not all physical servers host a virtual server.
A server will normally have many devices that are approved to access the server, but it is
possible for new servers to be created that do not yet have any approved devices. When a
device is approved for connection to a server, the date of that approval should be recorded.
It is also possible for a device that was approved for a server to lose its approval. If that
happens, the date that the approval was removed should be recorded. If a device loses its
approval, it may regain that approval at a later date if whatever circumstance that lead to
the removal is resolved.
A server can provide many user services, such as email, chat, homework managers, and
others. Each service on a server has a unique identification number and name. The date
that GUTS began offering that service should be recorded. Each service runs on only one
server although new servers might not offer any services initially. Client-side services are
not tracked in this system so every service must be associated with a server.
Employees must get permission to access a service before they can use it. Most employees
have permissions to use a wide array of services, but new employees might not have
permission on any service. Each service can support multiple approved employees as
users, but new services might not have any approved users at first. The date on which the
employee is approved to use a service is tracked by the system. The first time an employee
is approved to access a service, the employee must create a username and password. This
will be the same username and password that the employee will use for every service for
which the employee is eventually approved.
The solution for this case is shown in Figure P5.10 below.
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FIGURE P5.10 Global Unified Technology Sales ERD Solution
11. Global Computer Solutions (GCS) is an information technology consulting company with
many offices located throughout the United States. The company’s success is based on its
ability to maximize its resources—that is, its ability to match highly skilled employees with
projects according to region. To better manage its projects, GCS has contacted you to design a
database so that GCS managers can keep track of their customers, employees, projects, project
schedules, assignments, and invoices.
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The GCS database must support all of GCS’s operations and information requirements. A
basic description of the main entities follows:




The employees working for GCS have an employee ID, an employee last name, a middle
initial, a first name, a region, and a date of hire.
Valid regions are as follows: Northwest (NW), Southwest (SW), Midwest North (MN),
Midwest South (MS), Northeast (NE), and Southeast (SE).
Each employee has many skills, and many employees have the same skill.
Each skill has a skill ID, description, and rate of pay. Valid skills are as follows: data entry
I, data entry II, systems analyst I, systems analyst II, database designer I, database
designer II, Cobol I, Cobol II, C++ I, C++ II, VB I, VB II, ColdFusion I, ColdFusion II,
ASP I, ASP II, Oracle DBA, MS SQL Server DBA, network engineer I, network engineer
II, web administrator, technical writer, and project manager. Table P5.11a shows an
example of the Skills Inventory.
Skill
Data Entry I
Data Entry II
Systems Analyst I
Systems Analyst II
DB Designer I
DB Designer II
Cobol I
Cobol II
C++ I
C++ II
VB I
VB II
ColdFusion I
ColdFusion II
ASP I
ASP II
Oracle DBA
SQL Server DBA
Network Engineer I
Network Engineer II
Web Administrator
Technical Writer
Project Manager
Employee
Seaton Amy; Williams Josh; Underwood Trish
Williams Josh; Seaton Amy
Craig Brett; Sewell Beth; Robbins Erin; Bush Emily; Zebras Steve
Chandler Joseph; Burklow Shane; Robbins Erin
Yarbrough Peter; Smith Mary
Yarbrough Peter; Pascoe Jonathan
Kattan Chris; Epahnor Victor; Summers Anna; Ellis Maria
Kattan Chris; Epahnor Victor, Batts Melissa
Smith Jose; Rogers Adam; Cope Leslie
Rogers Adam; Bible Hanah
Zebras Steve; Ellis Maria
Zebras Steve; Newton Christopher
Duarte Miriam; Bush Emily
Bush Emily; Newton Christopher
Duarte Miriam; Bush Emily
Duarte Miriam; Newton Christopher
Smith Jose; Pascoe Jonathan
Yarbrough Peter; Smith Jose
Bush Emily; Smith Mary
Bush Emily; Smith Mary
Bush Emily; Smith Mary; Newton Christopher
Kilby Surgena; Bender Larry
Paine Brad; Mudd Roger; Kenyon Tiffany; Connor Sean
Table P5.11a Skills Inventory


GCS has many customers. Each customer has a customer ID, customer name, phone
number, and region.
GCS works by projects. A project is based on a contract between the customer and GCS to
design, develop, and implement a computerized solution. Each project has specific
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

characteristics such as the project ID, the customer to which the project belongs, a brief
description, a project date (that is, the date on which the project’s contract was signed), a
project start date (an estimate), a project end date (also an estimate), a project budget
(total estimated cost of project), an actual start date, an actual end date, an actual cost, and
one employee assigned as manager of the project.
The actual cost of the project is updated each Friday by adding that week’s cost (computed
by multiplying the hours each employee worked by the rate of pay for that skill) to the
actual cost.
The employee who is the manager of the project must complete a project schedule, which is,
in effect, a design and development plan. In the project schedule (or plan), the manager
must determine the tasks that will be performed to take the project from beginning to end.
Each task has a task ID, a brief task description, the task’s starting and ending date, the
type of skill needed, and the number of employees (with the required skills) required to
complete the task. General tasks are initial interview, database and system design,
implementation, coding, testing, and final evaluation and sign-off. For example, GCS might
have the project schedule shown in Table P5.11b.
Project ID: 1
Description: Sales Management System
Company : See Rocks
Contract Date: 2/12/2016 Region: NW
Start Date: 3/1/2016
End Date:
7/1/2016
Budget: $15,500
Start
End
Task
Skill(s)
Quantity
Date
Date
Description
Required
Required
3/1/16
3/6/16 Initial Interview
Project Manager
1
Systems Analyst II
1
DB Designer I
1
3/11/16 3/15/16 Database Design
DB Designer I
1
3/11/16 4/12/16 System Design
Systems Analyst II
1
Systems Analyst I
2
3/18/16 3/22/16 Database Implementation
Oracle DBA
1
3/25/16 5/20/16 System Coding & Testing
Cobol I
2
Cobol II
1
Oracle DBA
1
3/25/16 6/7/16 System Documentation
Technical Writer
1
6/10/16 6/14/16 Final Evaluation
Project Manager
1
Systems Analyst II
1
DB Designer I
1
Cobol II
1
6/17/16 6/21/16 On-Site System Online and
Project Manager
1
Data Loading
Systems Analyst II
1
DB Designer I
1
Cobol II
1
7/1/16
7/1/16 Sign-Off
Project Manager
1
Table P5.11b Project Schedule Form
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


Assignments: GCS pools all of its employees by region, and from
this pool, employees are assigned to a speciic task scheduled by
the project manager. For example, for the irst project’s schedule,
you know that for the period 3/1/16 to 3/6/16, a Systems Analyst II,
a Database Designer I, and a Project Manager are needed. (The
project manager is assigned when the project is created and
remains for the duration of the project). Using that information, GCS
searches the employees who are located in the same region as the
customer, matching the skills required and assigning them to the
project task.
Each project schedule task can have many employees assigned to it, and a given employee
can work on multiple project tasks. However, an employee can work on only one project
task at a time. For example, if an employee is already assigned to work on a project task
from 2/20/16 to 3/3/16, (s)he cannot work on another task until the current assignment is
closed (ends). The date on which an assignment is closed does not necessarily match the
ending date of the project schedule task, because a task can be completed ahead of or
behind schedule. The date on which an assignment is closed does not necessarily match the
ending date of the project schedule task because a task can be completed ahead of (or
behind) schedule.
Given all of the preceding information, you can see that the assignment associates an
employee with a project task, using the project schedule. Therefore, to keep track of the
assignment, you require at least the following information: assignment ID, employee,
project schedule task, date assignment starts, and date assignment ends (which could be
any dates as some projects run ahead of or behind schedule). Table P5.11c shows a sample
assignment form.
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Project ID:
Company:
Project
Task
Initial
Interview
1
Description: Sales Management System
See Rocks
Contract Date: 2/12/2010
As of: 03/29/10
SCHEDULED
ACTUAL ASSIGNMENTS
Start
End
Start
End
Date
Date
Skill
Employee
Date
Date
3/1/16 3/6/16 Project Mgr.
101—Connor S.
3/1/16
3/6/16
3/1/16
3/6/16
Sys. Analyst II 102—Burklow S.
DB Designer I 103—Smith M.
3/1/16
3/6/16
3/11/16 3/15/16 DB Designer I 104—Smith M.
3/11/16 3/14/16
Database
Design
System Design
3/11/16 4/12/16 Sys. Analyst II
Sys. Analyst I
Sys. Analyst I
3/18/16 3/22/16 Oracle DBA
Database
Implementation
System Coding 3/25/16 5/20/16 Cobol I
& Testing
Cobol I
Cobol II
Oracle DBA
System
3/25/16 6/7/16 Tech. Writer
Documentation
Final
6/10/16 6/14/16 Project Mgr.
Evaluation
Sys. Analyst II
DB Designer I
Cobol II
On-Site System 6/17/16 6/21/16 Project Mgr.
Online and
Sys. Analyst II
Data Loading
DB Designer I
Cobol II
Sign-Off
7/1/16 7/1/16 Project Mgr.
105—Burklow S.
106—Bush E.
107—Zebras S.
108—Smith J.
3/11/16
3/11/16
3/11/16
3/15/16
109—Summers A.
110—Ellis M.
111—Ephanor V.
112—Smith J.
113—Kilby S.
3/21/16
3/21/16
3/21/16
3/21/16
3/25/16
3/19/16
Table P5.11c Project Assignment Form

(Note: The assignment number is shown as a prefix of the employee name; for example,
101, 102.) Assume that the assignments shown previously are the only ones existing as of
the date of this design. The assignment number can be whatever number matches your
database design.
The hours an employee works are kept in a work log containing a record of the actual
hours worked by an employee on a given assignment. The work log is a weekly form that
the employee fills out at the end of each week (Friday) or at the end of each month. The
form contains the date (of each Friday of the month or the last work day of the month if it
doesn’t falls on a Friday), the assignment ID, the total hours worked that week (or up to
the end of the month), and the number of the bill to which the work log entry is charged.
Obviously, each work log entry can be related to only one bill. A sample list of the current
work log entries for the first sample project is shown in Figure P5.11d.
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Employee
Week
Assignment
Hours
Bill
Name
Ending
Number
Worked Number
Burklow S.
3/1/16
1-102
4
xxx
Connor S.
3/1/16
1-101
4
xxx
Smith M.
3/1/16
1-103
4
xxx
Burklow S.
3/8/16
1-102
24
xxx
Connor S.
3/8/16
1-101
24
xxx
Smith M.
3/8/16
1-103
24
xxx
Burklow S.
3/15/16
1-105
40
xxx
Bush E.
3/15/16
1-106
40
xxx
Smith J.
3/15/16
1-108
6
xxx
Smith M.
3/15/16
1-104
32
xxx
Zebras S.
3/15/16
1-107
35
xxx
Burklow S.
3/22/16
1-105
40
Bush E.
3/22/16
1-106
40
Ellis M.
3/22/16
1-110
12
Ephanor V.
3/22/16
1-111
12
Smith J.
3/22/16
1-108
12
Smith J.
3/22/16
1-112
12
Summers A.
3/22/16
1-109
12
Zebras S.
3/22/16
1-107
35
Burklow S.
3/29/16
1-105
40
Bush E.
3/29/16
1-106
40
Ellis M.
3/29/16
1-110
35
Ephanor V.
3/29/16
1-111
35
Kilby S.
3/29/16
1-113
40
Smith J.
3/29/16
1-112
35
Summers A.
3/29/16
1-109
35
Zebras S.
3/29/16
1-107
35
Note: xxx represents the bill ID. Use the one that matches the bill
number in your database.
Table P5.11d Project Work-Log Form as of 3/29/16

(Note: xxx represents the bill ID. Use the one that matches the bill number in your
database.)
Finally, every 15 days, a bill is written and sent to the customer, totaling the hours worked
on the project that period. When GCS generates a bill, it uses the bill number to update the
work-log entries that are part of that bill. In summary, a bill can refer to many work log
entries, and each work log entry can be related to only one bill. GCS sent one bill on
3/15/16 for the first project (See Rocks), totaling the hours worked between 3/1/16 and
3/15/16. Therefore, you can safely assume that there is only one bill in this table and that
that bill covers the work-log entries shown in the above form.
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Your assignment is to create a database that will fulfill the operations described in this
problem. The minimum required entities are employee, skill, customer, region, project, project
schedule, assignment, work log, and bill. (There are additional required entities that are not
listed.)
 Create all of the required tables and all of the required
relationships.
 Create the required indexes to maintain entity integrity when using
surrogate primary keys.
 Populate the tables as needed (as indicated in the sample data and
forms).
This is a complex database design case that requires the identification of many business rules, the
organization of those business rules, and the development of a complete database model. Note that
this database design case has three primary objectives:
 Evaluation of primary keys and surrogate keys. (When should each one be used?)
 Evaluation of the use of indexes on candidate keys to avoid duplicate entries when using
surrogate keys.
 Evaluation of the use of redundant relationships. In some cases, it is better to have the foreign
key attribute added to an entity, instead of using multiple join operations.
We recommend that you use this problem as the basis for a two part case project. One way to work
with this database case is to form small groups of two or three students and then let each group work
the problem independently. The following bullet list provides a sample scenario:
 Divide the class in groups of three students per group.
 Distribute the GCS database case to all students.
 Assign a deadline for the groups to submit an initial design ERD with written explanations of
the ERD components and features. This deadline should be two weeks from the assignment
date. (While the groups are working on the design phase, students will be learning to use
SQL to generate information.)
 The initial ERD must include:
 All the main entities with all primary/foreign keys clearly labeled.
 The identification of all relevant dependent attributes.
 For each table, the identification of all possible required indexes.
 Meet with each group and evaluate each design, paying close attention to:
 The propagation of primary/foreign keys and how surrogate keys would be useful to
simplify the design.
 The use of indexes to minimize the occurrence of duplicate entries.
 By this time, students should be familiar with SQL. Ask questions about how a query
would be written to generate information. You can use the sample queries provided in
the GCSdata-sol.mdb teacher solution file. This database is located on your
Instructor’s CD.)
Please note that there are two database files available:

The GCSdata.mdb database is located in the Student subfolder on the Instructor’s CD. This
MS Access database contains the sample CUSTOMER, EMPLOYEE, REGION, and SKILL
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
tables. You can either distribute this file to your students by copying it to a common drive in
your lab or you can ask your students to download this file from the Course Technology
website for this book.
The GCSdata-sol.mdb database is located in the Teacher subfolder on the Instructor’s CD.
This MS Access database contains the complete set of populated tables. In addition, the
solution database contains some sample queries. You can use the sample queries as the basis
for second part of this case, which may be used to complement the SQL coverage in chapters
7 and 8.
Figure P5-11a shows the sample tables in the GCSdata.mdb student database.
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Figure P5-11a GCS Student Sample Database Tables
The GCSdata-sol.mdb file contains the solution for this design case. Figure P5-11b shows the relational
diagram for the solution.
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Figure P5.11b – Relational Diagram for the GCS Database
To help your students understand the ERD, use Table P5.11 to describe the main tables and the main
indexes that are appropriate for this design implementation.
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TABLE P5.11 ERD Documentation
Table
Name
Customer
Unique, Not Null Index
(on candidate key)
Explanation
unique(cus_name)
The unique index on cus_name is
used to ensure no duplicate customers
exist.
Region
region_id (surrogate)
unique(region_name)
The unique index on region_name is
used to ensure that no duplicate
regions are entered.
Employee emp_id (surrogate)
unique(emp_lname,
The unique index on emp_lname,
emp_fname, emp_mi)
emp_fname and emp_mi is used to
ensure that no duplicate employees
are entered.
Skill
skill_id (surrogate)
unique(skill_description) The unique index on skill_description
is used to ensure that no duplicate
skills are entered.
EmpSkill emp_id, skill_id
The composite primary key
(composite)
ensures that no duplicate
skills are entered for each
employee.
Project
prj_id
unique(cus_id,
The unique index on cus_id and
prj_description is used to ensure that
(surrogate)
prj_description)
no duplicate project entries exist for a
given customer.
Task
task_id
unique(prj_id,
The unique index on prj_id and
task_descript is used to ensure that no
(project
(surrogate)
task_descript)
duplicate task is given for the same
schedule
project.
)
TS
ts_id(surrogate)
unique(task_id,
The unique index on task_id and
skill_id is to prevent duplicate listings
(task
skill_id)
for a single skill within a single task
schedule
for a single project.
)
Assign
asn_id
unique (ps_id,
The unique index on ps_id, emp_id,
and ts_id is used to ensure that an
(surrogate)
emp_id, ts_id)
employee cannot be assigned twice to
perform the same skill on the same
task for a given project.
Worklog wl_id (surrogate)
unique(asn_id,
The unique indexes on asn_id and
wl_date are used to ensure that no
wl_date)
duplicate work log entries exist (for
an employee) on a given date.
Bill
bill_id
(surrogate)
Primary key
cus_id (surrogate)
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It is important to point out to your students that the surrogate primary keys are usually not shown in the
graphical user interfaces that are available to the end users. The only function of the surrogate primary
key is to provide a single-attribute identifier for each row in the table.
The completed ERD for the GCS database is shown in Figure P5-11C.
Figure P5.11c – ERD for the GCS Database
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